What did happened to part 2? I bought it not that long ago. And now it's not even in the cloud. I know there's a new version that have all this buy fake money with real money BS. Does devs have controll of what stays in the cloud too?

What did happened to part 2? I bought it not that long ago. And now it's not even in the cloud. I know there's a new version that have all this buy fake money with real money BS. Does devs have controll of what stays in the cloud too?

That "new" version is the same game you paid for, but they updated it into a freemium app.

What did happened to part 2? I bought it not that long ago. And now it's not even in the cloud. I know there's a new version that have all this buy fake money with real money BS. Does devs have controll of what stays in the cloud too?

Forget the damn cloud. First, the only apps I find in "the cloud" are once which I downloaded to my iDevice, not my pc, and only if a backup was performed before deletion.

The only safe way to have any control over your purchases is to save the files on your pc or Mac. And when you update an app, if you think something might have changed for the worse, drag the old file out of the trash bin and save it somewhere.

Should be Apples responsibility tho informing their customer that they're "getting screwed over in this update". Or better yet, not allow these kind of schemes.

I've stated the same in a number of threads. Apple should require ANY update that adds advertisements, iap purchases, or any degradation of functionality to disclose such info in the update description. How many times are these changes simply described as "bug fixes"?

What I would prefer is for every update to include a link to a complete changelog file on the Internet. When you go to update, you would see a clickable or touchable link that would take you to, for example, KB1533938.

I know plenty of people wouldn't bother to read patch notes, but at least there would be full disclosure for those who feel like taking the time.

I've stated the same in a number of threads. Apple should require ANY update that adds advertisements, iap purchases, or any degradation of functionality to disclose such info in the update description. How many times are these changes simply described as "bug fixes"?

Best example for me was HotGen, where "tested with iOS 5" actually meant putting ads in a previously-paid game.

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